Occasionally-updated blog of a mom trying to instill a love of comics in her kids (because the children are our future).
Monday, October 24, 2011
I want it now. Apparently.
And that is that same-day digital is a very good way to (theoretically) separate me from my money.
I say "theoretically" because, well, not too many comics are same-day digital. I went online looking, thinking I'd give Captain America and Bucky a look (you know, and then buy the trade as planned whenever it comes out). Maybe the newer Avengers stuff too. But it's not there. So I didn't.
Here is something else I've learned about myself. I am not willing to wait a month for a 1/3 reduction in cost. I know this because I've paid full price for DC Digital despite knowing the price would drop from $2.99 to $1.99 in really-not-all-that-long-in-the-grand-scheme-of-things.
Hear that, marketing folks? And this is someone who is mainly a trade-waiter these days. Immediate gratification trumps all.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Where do I go to figure this stuff out?
But I have a few questions anyway.
Did Kyle Rayner still used to go out with Donna Troy?
Did Starfire still spend all that time hanging out with Animal Man and his family?
How about the events of Countdown? In? Out?
How about Catwoman's baby?
Roy in RHatO is definitely different; I'm wondering whether there are plans down the road to bring back Lian in order to redo that whole "fatherhood turns Roy into a better man" thing.
One thing that makes me sad is the whole "Earth folks don't trust aliens" thing. Because that was actually one thing I enjoyed about the DC universe--that the people were kind of open to that sort of thing.
Monday, October 17, 2011
My first foray into e-comics
It was issue 1 of Red Hood and the Outlaws.
Don't judge me.
I'll probably get the next one, since I like all the characters well enough to give the title a while for the rough edges to smooth out.
But mainly I'm here to talk about the format.
Yes, it's hard to get used to. I'm using an oldish Acer Aspire running Windows 7, and I keep my screen resolution at 1366 X 768. If my screen were a little taller I might find it a bit easier to read without mad scrolling skills, but I can increase image size, and that is a big plus. These days I am having a harder time reading even a regular old on-paper comic book if the text is, say, red on black. I've taken to getting some of my trades as hardbacks because they tend to be a bit bigger and that can make a difference. Now, I don't know that my eyes are going to get worse to the point where even that won't help. But if they do, the electronic comics will be a real eyesaver.
Yes, I know that the aging comic fan with fading eyesight isn't the primary audience for electronic comics. But I'll tell you right now that it is something that will make it possible for us old folks to read comics for much, much longer.
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Me and the Legion: An Exercise in Avoiding Fan Entitlement
I first read it in the sixties when I was very, very young. Curt Swan on art. Brainiac 5, whose power was that he was smart. And Saturn Girl, who I still think of as one of the best comic-book role models ever for young women.
I read it in the seventies. In fact, I used to read it in study hall in high school in the later seventies. And I read it in the eighties. The Legion were adults now, for the most part, and by then I was as well. They married, even had children. Being removed from present-time continuity seemed to free them to age in a way that contemporary titles perhaps couldn't. (I suppose the "having children" thing would have led to trouble of that sort eventually.)
I read it into the early nineties. The "Five Years Later" storyline? Enjoyed that immensely. Really liked the relationship between Light Lass and Shrinking Violet. And I loved it when there were two Legion books going at once. Loved it. I got them both. I cared more about the one with the older, original Legion, but I read both.
Then the books stopped in '94, and of course I stopped reading them. (This was also Insane Nineties Time at Marvel, so in fact I gave up comics altogether for ten years or so.) I tried the reboot, with the new codenames and adjusted origins, and while it was a decent book, it just wasn't "my" Legion, the one I'd grown up with. I'm not being critical of it on that point, just saying that after a 25-or-so-year relationship with the original LSH, I just couldn't really get into the new book. I don't always connect to characters like that, but in this case I did, and reading the new stories with the similar-but-different characters just felt sort of pointless. (Yes, I know I'm saying I'm "that" sort of fan. I'm not always. But with the Legion, I guess I am.)
I did read a few issues of the newest version, the one with Supergirl, because my elder daughter wanted to get them. She didn't like it much, so we didn't continue with it.
Therefore I really quite liked the Lightning Saga when it came out, and the Legion of Three Worlds, and so forth. I had been kindasorta hoping for more of them, but it seems unlikely at this point. Of course if DC ever decides to give "my" Legion their own book, I am there--floppy, digital, and trade!
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Buying comics in real life, or trying to
Today was to be comic-book-shop day, so we took off and drove to one of our favorite stops.
Closed. I got out to look at the door, and it said--specifically--"Closed, not reopening." That's too bad, they were one of the few places I've seen in recent years that kept a large selection of back issues in longboxes. Kindly, it also included a recommendation for another comic shop to try ("the closest, and the best" said the sign). This shop was also on our list, so we went there next.
Closed. No sign.
If we'd been less fixated on comic books, we might have given up then.
However, we instead found a phone book, called the second shop, and were given the new address a few blocks away. Much bigger store, and I picked up a few things. I suspect it's one of those shops where some folks would feel ignored--a group of regulars was gathered around the register chatting, etc. Luckily, as a comic reader of 40+ years, I'm not shy about barging in on that sort of thing, and they were perfectly friendly once I had. (The fact that I take the position of "Age is Strength!" doesn't hurt either.) They didn't have what I was looking for in particular, though. (It was the trade of Red Hood: Lost Days, if you must know!)
So we made one more stop, where I found what I wanted and more besides. Nice shop, very customer-friendly.
Today's lesson, then, is that if you're a comic shop and you've moved, don't assume that because your regulars still know where you are, you're not losing any money. I'm sure I'm not the only one who--when visiting a city--makes a point of checking out the comic shops. And even if I'm only there once a year, I might be spending some bucks--in fact, because I'm only there once a year, I'm likely to be spending some bucks. Don't make it hard for me to find you!
Friday, June 10, 2011
Final (yeah right) reboot thoughts
This is probably why, historically (and when you're my age you do get to use the word "historically" when describing your life) I've always preferred group books. From Fantastic Four to Avengers to Legion of Super-Heroes to X-Men, the majority of the comics I picked up every month were group titles. Most of the longer runs in my collection are group books. There are a few reasons for that, but one in particular comes to mind right now
In a group book, if a favorite character is eliminated or changed radically, it's likely that there will be other characters who interest me still in the book. Hawkeye leaves the group? Well, damn...but still, Scarlet Witch! In a solo title, say back when Tony Stark was replaced as Iron Man by Rhodey, that could have been a deal-breaker--although that's a poor example in my own case because I really liked Rhodey in the armor--but still, point made, right?
On the other hand, back when Fantastic Four was my favorite book (the pre-teen years, this was), if they had killed off the Human Torch, I might have stopped buying it because at that time none of the other characters were all that interesting to me. (They were all "old." :P)
So, is a reboot of a character likely to turn me off enough to make me lose interest? Well...maybe. Let me think about that while I type.
Now, I do feel a little silly when I say that I understand why someone would be angry that a favorite storyline no longer "counted." Isn't a good story a good story regardless? What about Elseworlds or What Ifs or imaginary stories?
Well, sure, a good story is a good story. But if you're reading a What If? story, you file it away a little differently in your mind, or at least I do. You don't mentally add it to the stack of information on that character.
And reading serialized literature isn't like reading a stand-alone piece. On some level, anything that has to do with a particular character, unless you know it's explicitly out of "canon," is really only a chapter in the life of that character. In a narrative sense it becomes part of that character's life experience. It informs their opinions of and future interactions with the other characters in that storyline.
I suppose it's going to be a case-by-case thing, whether a particular aspect of a reboot irks me to the point where I throw up my hands and say "oh, s/he's not even the same person!" So, if suddenly Tim Drake never met Connor Kent? That's an enormous change in both characters, because their friendship was a significant one that affected not only what they'd done but how they had developed as characters. I'm not a big Tim fan, but if I were, that's something that would probably bother me, because a Tim who never knew Connor is not the same person.
Heck, I'm not even particularly a fan of either character, and that seems pretty clear to me.
So am I going to jump ship on titles or characters I like due to a reboot? Probably not. But maybe. We'll see.
Thursday, June 02, 2011
How ever did I miss this?
Okay, yeah, I still want my trades and/or hardcovers. I don't really like reading comics online. Put it down to old eyes.
But when it comes to finding out what's happening in my favorite titles when the books actually come out? I am weak. So, so weak.
Not buying the floppies is easy. But to be able to get a peak at the latest Secret Six on The Day? Instant gratification?
I don't know if I can withstand that temptation.
Wednesday, June 01, 2011
How many DC books will I be getting come September?
I really didn't start to read DC books until I was an adult, and yes, it was the fault of the internet, why do you ask? :) So it was after the original Crisis reboot when I got my start. My vague childhood memories of Hal and Barry didn't interfere at all with my later appreciation for Kyle and Wally.
So, like my lifelong experience with Marvel, my shorter time with DC has given me a reasonably continuous...continuity. :) Marvel does tweak its history--a 21st-century Iron Man simply couldn't have gotten his start during the Viet Nam war--but he's still Tony Stark, and pretty much everything that's been printed in his comics is still a part of his canon history.
Now, I don't know how others feel about it, but to me the serial aspect of comic books is a great part of its appeal. A comic book or (more modernly) a story arc corresponds, in my mind, with a chapter of a book that I'm still reading. So if I start a new chapter and it tells me to ignore everything that's gone before? I won't be happy. But that's me.
But you know, keep all the Green Lanterns and I'll keep getting GLC. Keep Gail Simone on Secret Six and I'll keep buying it regardless of what happens there. I'll be tremendously disappointed if Superman becomes a bachelor or if Jason Todd is rekilled. (OTOH if Red Hood gets his own book I will probably break my no-floppies rule.)
So am I going to buy 52 DC books a month or the associated trades? Um....nope. Will anyone? I imagine someone will.
Sunday, May 29, 2011
I need to get a new bookcase to hold all my trades...
Back in the old days, if I discovered a new book or character, I might start getting back issues. The last time I did this was actually not all that long ago, when I discovered the Kyle Rayner Green Lantern in some trades of Morrison's JLA; there were no trades available of that era's GL so I actually went to an old-school comic shop, with tables and tables of longboxes, and got what they had. I...probably wouldn't do that now. I've gotten spoiled by being able to have my comics on a bookshelf with the titles on the spine.
But now, of course, I can generally find what I want in a trade. When I discovered (via a post in scans daily IIRC) the character of Pete Wisdom, there were eleven different trades I could get to learn more about him. Eleven. And unlike back issues of floppies, that's money that goes to the comic company. So I see why they're so available, certainly.
Waiting on three Blackest Night hc's next week...
Monday, April 18, 2011
Comics are good
It's certainly changed my reading habits in that I read them in groups of six, which generally means that I read an entire story arc at once. This, I find I prefer. I suspect that has to do with the fact that stories now are often written with the 6-issue arc in mind.
Also during this time period, we bought a house. It's a great place, early 20th-century but comfortable (and safe, ever since we had the whole place rewired! :)) But, as you know if you've done this, buying a house means buying less of other things, especially including recreational items like comics. The trade thing means that presumably I'll be able to pick them up at some point in the future when I've more disposable income. But for now?
I've dropped most of my DC books apart from Secret Six. I will probably pick up Green Lantern Corps again once the massive crossover thing is done. And what with what's happened with Red Arrow/Arsenal I see little point to buying Titans (or JLA come to think of it).
And while I still love the Avengers, right now the sheer number of books still makes it a little cost-prohibitive. I'll get them someday.
Fantastic Four won't be back for me until the Human Torch is.
I do plan to continue buying Captain America, and the new Captain America and Bucky WWII-era book looks like fun.
I've always had a weakness for Marvel's WWII heroes, whether original-Timely or not, and by "always" I mean since the '70s when I was a kid reading the Invaders book. (Which I've been picking up the trades of as they come out.) I wouldn't mind seeing another ongoing Invaders title, and was in fact hoping for one when Invaders Now! was announced.
Invaders Now!, btw, will be here tomorrow. I hope. And maybe then I'll be able to guess as to the likelihood of another ongoing?
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
Deadpool dreams
Well, Bea Arthur's gone, the man's got to have a new crush, right?